The National - News

Company grounded in balloon tour crash inquiry

Balloon Adventures Emirates is ordered to suspend flights until investigat­ion into accident that injured six is completed

- Tahira Yaqoob newsdesk@thenationa­l.ae

DUBAI // A hot-air balloon company has been grounded until an investigat­ion into how a pilot and several passengers were injured by a misfiring burner is complete.

The General Civil Aviation Authority has asked Balloon Adventures Emirates to suspend its flights, company partner Adam McEwan said. There have been no flights since the incident on January 14 when Dutch pilot Jelke Haven, 41, was hurt after fire from the burner was blown in his face as he was landing the balloon.

The father of two suffered severe burns and also fractured his jaw as he tried to leap out of the way of the flames.

Five tourists on board, including a nine-year-old Chinese girl, also suffered burns. They were treated at Al Dhaid hospital in Sharjah but have since been discharged.

Mr Haven is still recovering at Al Qassimi Hospital. His family, including his wife Karin, have flown from the Netherland­s to be with him.

“The poor guy did unfortunat­ely get a face full of flash,” said Mr McEwan.

“After landing there was a technical malfunctio­n with the burner. Instead of switching off, it flashed in the direction of the pilot at the conclusion of the flight.

“He stood up to say to everyone: ‘That is it, congratula­tions, start to exit the balloon’ and that is when it happened. He stood up and it misfired and unfortunat­ely hit him.”

Mr Haven was trying to land after an hour-long flight over the desert near Dubai.

The balloon set off from Margham and was at Al Madam 60 kilometres from the city.

It was said to have bounced on the ground three times before being blown on its side and dragged 8 metres by high winds.

As it tipped over, the burner emitted a flash of fire in the pilot’s face. Mr McEwan said managers had been studying a video of the flight to figure out what happened.

“We can’t actually see on the video but when the burner flashed, he did what every other human being does and tried to move out of the way, and hit his jaw on something.

“All the doctors are saying he is stable but are keeping him under observatio­n before they release him in about a week.” He said the wind had been measured at 5 knots in the desert that day.

“You can barely feel that on your face. It is a very different weather system [in the desert].”

Mr Haven became the youngest balloon pilot in Holland when he received his commercial licence in 1992 at the age of 17.

His father was one of the first balloonist­s in Holland when he started flying in the 1980s.

‘ All the doctors are saying the pilot is stable but they are keeping him under observatio­n Adam McEwan co-partner of Balloon Adventures Emirates

Mr Haven, who has completed more than 2,200 flights, became known for a stunt in which he attached a lifeboat instead of a basket to his hot air balloon in 2004.

In June 2006, nine passengers on board his balloon suffered injuries, including broken limbs, after a hard landing in a meadow. Mr Haven said at the time he was trying to avoid power cables when his fuel ran out and the wind shifted suddenly.

He founded A3 Ballon in Holland to offer leisure flights but moved to the UAE several years ago to work for ballooning companies in the Middle East.

Fellow Dutch pilot Erik Bos- man, who works for Dubai company Sindbad Balloons and has known Mr Haven for 30 years, described him as “a very experience­d balloonist”. “I do not know what happened exactly but a burner misfiring is a very unusual thing to happen. I have spoken to Karin and she is keeping calm.”

Mr McEwan said the pilot had decided to return home once he was discharged from hospital. Mr Haven, he said, acted heroically by ensuring all his passengers left the balloon safely. The GCAA was unavailabl­e to comment.

 ?? Courtesy Sharjah Police ?? Dutch pilot Jelke Haven and five tourists were injured after their hot-air balloon crashed just over a week ago.
Courtesy Sharjah Police Dutch pilot Jelke Haven and five tourists were injured after their hot-air balloon crashed just over a week ago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates